- as
axoplasmic transport)
materials are
carried through the
axoplasm to or from the soma. The
electrical resistance of the axoplasm,
called axoplasmic resistance...
-
Axonal transport, also
called axoplasmic transport or
axoplasmic flow, is a
cellular process responsible for
movement of mitochondria, lipids, synaptic...
-
research on the
peripheral nervous system and her
discovery of
bidirectional axoplasmic transport. She and her
husband Jerzy Konorski founded the
Department of...
-
during practice for the
upcoming race.[citation needed]
Brain injury Axoplasmic transport Strich SJ (August 1956). "Diffuse
degeneration of the cerebral...
- retina.
These areas with
reduced blood flow
reflect the
obstruction of
axoplasmic flow due to
mechanical or
vascular causes and the
consequential ac****ulation...
-
initiation of apoptosis, ER-to-Golgi
vesicle shuttling, and fast axonal, or
axoplasmic transport. In sperm, a testis-specific
isoenzyme GAPDHS is expressed....
-
forming a "retraction bulb". The
synaptic terminal function is lost, as
axoplasmic transport ceases and no
neurotransmitters are created. The
nucleus of...
-
Rizzo and
Donald A. Robin,
Brain (1996), 119,
pages 951-96. "The role of
axoplasmic transport in the
pathogenesis of
retinal cotton-wool spots", D. McLeod...
-
injury with
damage to axons,
causing them to
swell due to
blockage of
axoplasmic transport. In
addition to trauma,
axonal spheroids can be
found in aged...
-
Action potential Postsynaptic potential Excitatory Inhibitory Long term
Axoplasmic transport Neuroregeneration/Nerve
regeneration Neuroplasticity/Synaptic...